Dhaka, Nov. 9 -- Seeds are the soul of agriculture. Inside each tiny grain lies the beginning of life, the promise of food, the dreams of farmers, and the strength of a nation. But the story of seeds has changed.

What once sat safely in clay pots inside farmers' homes is now locked away under corporate control.

Companies like Monsanto, Bayer, Syngenta, and Cargill decide what grows in our fields, when it's planted, and even how much a farmer must pay for it.

In rural Bangladesh, women were historically the custodians of seeds. They selected, dried, preserved, and exchanged them, passing knowledge across generations.

This feminine wisdom was the backbone of the country's agricultural culture. But the "Green Revolution" nearly erased th...